Sysvinit

For installation instructions see the Section called Installing Sysvinit-2.85 in Chapter 6.

Official Download Location

Sysvinit (2.85):
ftp://ftp.cistron.nl/pub/people/miquels/sysvinit/

Contents of Sysvinit

(Last checked against version 2.84.)

The Sysvinit package contains programs to control the startup, running and shutdown of all other programs.

Sysvinit installs the following:

Program Files

halt, init, killall5, last, lastb (link to last), mesg, pidof (link to killall5), poweroff (link to halt), reboot (link to halt), runlevel, shutdown, sulogin, telinit (link to init), utmpdump and wall

Descriptions

(Last checked against version 2.84.)

Program file descriptions

halt

halt notes, in the file /var/log/wtmp, that the system is being brought down and then tells the kernel to either halt, reboot or poweroff the system. If halt or reboot is called when the system is not in runlevel 0 or 6, shutdown will be invoked instead (with the flag -h or -r).

init

init is the parent of all processes. Its primary role is to create processes from a script stored in the file /etc/inittab. This file usually has entries which cause init to spawn gettys on each line from which users can log in. It also controls autonomous processes required by any particular system.

killall5

killall5 is the SystemV killall command. It sends a signal to all processes except the processes in its own session, so it won't kill the shell that is running the script it was called from.

last

last searches back through the file /var/log/wtmp (or the file designated by the -f flag) and displays a list of all users logged in (and out) since that file was created.

lastb

lastb is the same as last, except that by default it shows a log of the file /var/log/btmp, which contains all the bad login attempts.

mesg

mesg controls the access to the user's terminal by others. It's typically used to allow or disallow other users to write to his terminal.

pidof

pidof displays the process identifiers (PIDs) of the named programs.

poweroff

poweroff is equivalent to shutdown -h -p now. It halts the computer and switches off the computer (when using an APM compliant BIOS and APM is enabled in the kernel).

reboot

reboot is equivalent to shutdown -r now. It reboots the computer.

runlevel

runlevel reads the system utmp file (usually /var/run/utmp), locates the runlevel record and prints the previous and current system runlevel on its standard output, separated by a single space.

shutdown

shutdown brings the system down in a secure way. All logged-in users are notified that the system is going down and login is blocked.

sulogin

sulogin is invoked by init when the system goes into single user mode (this is done through an entry in /etc/inittab). Init also tries to execute sulogin when it is passed the -b flag from the boot loader (LILO, for example).

telinit

telinit sends appropriate signals to init, telling it which runlevel to enter.

utmpdump

utmpdumps prints the content of a file (usually /var/run/utmp) on standard output in a user friendly format.

wall

wall sends a message to logged in users that have their mesg permission set to yes.

Sysvinit Installation Dependencies

(Last checked against version 2.84.)

Bash: sh
Binutils: as, ld
Coreutils: chown, cp, install, ln, mknod, rm
GCC: cc, cc1, collect2, cpp0
Make: make
Sed: sed